| ▲ | darth_avocado 4 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
You’re equating ocasional inconveniences to what the entire experience was. I could also point to the current setup and say the same. The times I scan in self checkout and the machine malfunctions, needing a manager. The times I added the medical history myself but the nurse/doctor missed it because they themselves weren’t taking it. Every single time I have to walk back and forth during a meal because I now serve my own table. I’ve had to wait for help at a self checkout more times than I’ve had my eggs broken. It’s worth questioning why you’re so eager to defend corporations making you work for free. A lot of this reads like you don’t like to deal with people because you think people, especially in the service industry are incompetent and are wrong majority of the time. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | sublinear 4 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> equating ocasional inconveniences to what the entire experience was This was highly dependent on the neighborhood you lived in. It still is to some extent. Full service is still around, but I wouldn't expect that in "the bad parts of town". You do not want those people doing those jobs, but now we're really heading somewhere politically incorrect and touching on systemic inequality. | |||||||||||||||||
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